A U.S. Navy P-8 Poseidon taxies along the runway before it takes off from Perth Airport on route to rejoin the on-going search operations for the missing Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 in Perth, Australia, Thursday, April 10, 2014. Planes and ships hunting for the missing Malaysian jetliner zeroed in on a targeted patch of the Indian Ocean on Thursday, after a navy ship picked up underwater signals that are consistent with a plane's black box. (AP Photo/Rob Griffith)

A Malaysia Airlines jet was
forced to return to Kuala Lumpur today after a tire exploded during takeoff.

Malaysia Airlines Flight 192 landed safely Sunday after the landing gear on its right side malfunctioned during takeoff. The Boeing 737 had
166 people on board.

The incident comes as the hunt for Malaysia Airlines
Flight 370 continues. The plane disappeared March 8 and despite a massive search,
no firm evidence of the plane and its passengers has been found.

Fox News is reporting officials with Malaysia Airlines met
with some of the families of the plane's 227 passengers to discuss financial settlements.

Robotic submarine search will end in a week

The robotic submarine searching for the missing plane has
completed about half its search of the bottom of the Indian Ocean. Barring a
discovery, the Bluefin 21 will complete its dives in the water off the coast of
western Australia in about a week.

The AP is reporting the search area is a 6.2 mile circle
around where an underwater signal that could be from the plane's black boxes
was detected. The detection of the signal was considered to be a major
breakthrough in solving the mystery of the plane's disappearance but so far, no
debris or wreckage has been spotted.

"The narrowing of the search for today and tomorrow is
at a very critical juncture, so I appeal to everybody around the world to pray
and pray hard that we find something to work on over the next couple of
days," Malaysian Defense Minister Hishammuddin Hussein said this weekend.

Eleven aircraft and 12 ships are scanning the ocean's
surface for debris from the missing jetliner.